It was gone eleven o’clock on the thirteenth of April in what was
called, in those days, with no sense of irony, the ‘Year of Our
Lord’ Seventeen Hundred and Forty-Two. The premiere performance
of Handel’s oratorio Messiah at the Great Music Hall in Fishamble
Street, Dublin, had just finished to rapturous approval and now the concert
patrons spilled out into the streets talking about the musical spectacle
they had just witnessed. Few of them, for as much as they had enjoyed
the experience, realised that the date was one that would go down in history.
Two people knew, because they had access to the history books where it
was recorded. Marie Reynolds, dressed in a wine-red velvet dress that
had screamed ‘wear me’ when she saw it in the TARDIS wardrobe
walked beside The Doctor as they left the crowd behind and wandered through
unfamiliar streets.
“THAT was one of the best ideas you’ve had,” she enthused.
“I’ve always loved the fact that the first performance of
Messiah was in Dublin, not Paris or Milan or London where people expect
that kind of thing to happen."
"And the first one-way street system on your planet was put in place
to handle the carriage traffic for the event," The Doctor added.
"That's two firsts for your home city in one night."
"I wish we had a carriage," Marie admitted. "Or we'd parked
the TARDIS a bit closer."
She was feeling a little nervous as they left the bustle around Fishamble
street. There wasn't much in the way of street lighting. This time pre-dated
even gas lamps, and some of the noises coming from the ale houses and
gambling dens were disturbing. She and The Doctor were dressed a little
too richly in their concert going attire. They were being noticed by the
inhabitants of the shadows.
"Aren't we taking a lot longer getting back?"
The Doctor made a vague sound in his throat.
"Oh no," Marie groaned. "We're lost."
"Not exactly. The TARDIS is lost. This IS where we left it. But it
isn't here."
"How could that be? How could the TARDIS be missing? It can't be
stolen like a car or... or even a horse and carriage."
"Don't stop walking." The Doctor said with a warning note in
his voice and a tighter hold on Marie’s arm. "Don't look nervous.
Try to look as if you know where you're going."
"Easier said than done. I am nervous and I have no idea where I'm
going. I'm not even sure where I am. This is Seventeen-Forty-Two. Most
of the city I know was built AFTER this time. All that Georgian splendour
the tourist brochures go on about - the Four Courts, the Customs House,
just about everything on the south side... everything I recognise…
doesn't exist, yet. This area... I think it's part of what will be called
the Temple Bar in my time, but I don't know any of it."
"That's what I mean. Try to look like you DO know where you are."
Usually The Doctor managed that very well. He had told her once that one
of the romantic ‘tags’ that his race had acquired, even before
the rock song of the same name, was ‘Princes of the Universe’.
It usually fitted him well. He had a way of looking as if every part of
that universe belonged to him and answered to him.
But right now, it wasn’t working. He actually looked positively
worried. His long face seemed stretched even further and his expression
was tense.
Was it the loss of his TARDIS that worked such a dramatic change in him?
Of course, that was serious. Marie knew she didn’t want to be stranded
in mid-seventeenth century Dublin any more than he did. As interesting
as it was to experience that unique, once in a millennia concert, she
didn’t belong here. This was NOT her city. It was as alien to her
as any planet The Doctor had taken her to.
What was that phrase somebody coined – ‘the past is a foreign
country, they do things differently there.’
Right now she was realising it all too well.
“Something is wrong,” The Doctor murmured so that only she
could hear. “The TARDIS CAN’T just be stolen. Somebody must
have had knowledge….”
“Isn’t it JUST possible that you got the street wrong?”
Marie clung to one last desperate straw. “These buildings DO look
pretty much alike.”
“No…. there’s something else,” The Doctor insisted.
“Something is WRONG.”
“Wait a minute,” Marie said. “I think I DO know THAT
place. It’s….”
“Good. Stay there until I get back.” She was surprised when
The Doctor grabbed her by the arm and thrust her through the wicket gate
into the coaching yard of the public house and hotel that she thought
she recognised.
“I will BE back,” she heard him shout. “I promise you,
Marie Reynolds. I WILL… BE… BACK.”
She turned on her heels and stepped back out through the gate. For a brief
moment – a micro-moment, even – she thought the street outside
had been as bright as the artificial day of a floodlit football pitch.
Then the darkness of a time before electricity enveloped her again.
There was no sign of The Doctor.
She stepped back into the coach yard. An old man came out from the stable
and looked at her curiously.
"I think...." she began. "I'm going to need a room for
the night."
“A temporal portal!” The Doctor murmured as his eyes became
accustomed to the dark. At least, now, he understood the reason for the
sense of dread that had assailed him in the noisome thoroughfare known
as Lower Bridge Street – on account of it being the southern end
of the first bridge over the river Liffey.
There had been a disturbance in the temporal fabric.
Somebody was messing about with time – and as he had pointed out
on more than one occasion, time was his business.
The fact that she was wearing a velvet dress and produced a silver coin
to pay for supper and bed prompted the landlord of the oldest pub in Ireland
to provide both of those commodities. Even so, being a woman with no man
accompanying her still made her rather vulnerable.
She wasn't entirely sure why the said twelfth century coaching inn had
been named The Brazen Head. She was aware that the term was something
to do with fanciful brass heads that were possessed by spirits. In her
experience, though, the word 'brazen' had most often been used by her
grandmother who called any woman who wore skirts above the knee or necklines
below an equally arbitrary level 'brazen hussies'. She was aware that
several women in this establishment might qualify for her grandmother's
favourite put down and that a lot of the men liked them that way.
She was not among reputable company.
In consequence of this fact, she took certain precautions after she had
been conducted to the small private room with a bed and other basic furniture
in it. She bolted the door from the inside and pushed a heavy linen box
up against it. She then checked that there were no other doors into the
room and that the window had no access by steps, ivy or overhanging trees.
Of course, there was also no emergency exit in case of fire, but this
WAS a building that existed in her own time in some shape or form so she
trusted it not to burn down in the short time she was there.
Her other precaution was to transfer the small linen bag she had in the
dress pocket to the inside of the foundation garment she was wearing beneath
the dress and which she intended to wear as night attire. The bag contained
coins of gold, silver and common copper as well as a few small diamonds.
The Doctor always provided a package of that sort whenever they were anywhere
in time and space that a universal credit card couldn't be used 'just
in case they were separated' or, as he put it, 'in case she did something
pudding headed and got herself lost'.
This was definitely the former contingency. She laid herself down on the
bed in her 'shift' and listened to the sounds of the street outside and
the muffled but unmistakable sounds of the 'brazen women' and their male
friends inside. She wondered if she would ever get any sleep in such a
place.
Not exactly a temporal portal, The Doctor amended as he walked through
dark passages with old stone walls and the dryness of a place few people
had been in for a long time.
A temporal portal implied passage from one time to another. Instead he
had passed from the normal flow of time to a place where it didn't flow
at all - a null time bubble. He felt the lack of time's interminable flow
like the nagging dullness of a tooth cavity. It was unnatural, a perversion
of the most fundamental law of physical existence.
And it had no business being in eighteenth century Ireland. The technology
to produce such a bubble belonged in the hypothetical laboratories of
Artura Minor in the fifty-second century.
"Time Lord!" The ominous voice echoed around the ancient walls.
The Doctor studiously pretended not to be surprised that someone - or
something - knew what he was. Then again, why not? Anything capable of
setting up a null time bubble had to have some understanding of the race
who set themselves against interference with time even in such limited
fashion as this.
It was even more likely that he would know who or what was behind it all
once he came into his presence.
He wasn't going to be rushed, though. There was too much of the peremptory
summons in that voice. He WAS a Time Lord, after all. He was not accustomed
to being ordered by anyone.
So he took his time moving through the stone walled passageway, stopping
occasionally to examine one stone that appeared, if only to himself, more
worthy of close inspection than any other or to remove a sample of the
mortar from between the stones, analysing it by the simple method of tasting
the ancient substance.
Well, at least he knew WHERE he was, even if WHEN had been made redundant
by the null time bubble.
Marie did get to sleep eventually. She woke in the morning to a new sort
of noisiness outside as a steady stream of street traders with their wares
carried on overloaded carts and barrows headed towards the mid-eighteenth
century incarnation of 'Dublin Bridge'. The version she knew was built
in the nineteenth century as Whitworth Bridge after the then Lord Lieutenant
of Ireland and by the late twentieth renamed Father Mathew Bridge. Simply
being called Dublin Bridge was no use once there were several more bridges
crossing the Liffey within the city boundaries.
Having exhausted her interest in the names of bridges she lay back and
listened to the noises for a while. At least they were less threatening
than the sounds of the night. It almost felt like the background ambience
of a period drama. The musical 'Oliver' jumped to mind, but she was quite
sure nobody on Bridge Street was selling roses or asking her to 'consider
herself one of the family'.
It didn't look quite so bleak in the morning light but she was far from
home and dry. Those sounds predating the invention of the internal combustion
engine also served to remind her of how far away from home she was even
if she was still in the city of her birth.
She wondered about The Doctor's promise to come back for her.
Of course, she fully believed that he would come back if he could. But
his terms were vague. How LONG should she wait, and did it have to be
here, exactly, in this none too reputable hostelry?
While she was pondering those problems she noticed the door handle turning
slowly as if somebody was trying to test of it was locked or not.
"Yeah," she thought as the would-be intruder gave up and she
heard quickly retreating footsteps on the floorboards outside. “I
wasn't born yesterday!"
No, she remembered. She wasn't. The absurdity of it made her laugh out
loud for a long time during which she couldn't even think about rising
from the bed. Then she stopped laughing and got up. There was a pitcher
of water and a bowl on a dressing table. The water was cold but she washed
her hands and face in it and put on the dress that had been airing overnight.
She wasn't sure if it was the right fashion for day wear, but she had
no other choice. She tidied her hair and slipped on the shoes that matched
the dress and went in search of breakfast.
The Doctor thoroughly explored every passageway and checked every dark,
musty and mostly empty room before he finally ambled casually toward the
voice that knew he was a Time Lord.
It was as he approached the room containing the voice that he knew he
was dealing with somebody who cared little for human life. In the ante-room
he examined the paper dry mummies still clad in the clothes they had died
in. They came from different periods of history from as early as the mid
twelfth century when the Normans invaded Ireland and brought their clothes,
manners and language to the Dublin Pale as well as their need for defensive
structures to control the native masses.
A once young, virile man wearing chain mail with a silk tabard over it
to identify him on the field of battle dated from those early days. A
later corpse still bore a white beard and wore a gold brooch representing
some important office in the government of Ireland under Henry VIII. A
woman with an Elizabethan ruff decorated in imitation pearls also told
of courtly position. The most recent had worn a long powdered wig, highly
embroidered shirt under a velvet coat and knee length breeches with smooth
stockings and heeled shoes. He was every inch the civil servant of the
mid reign of the first Hanoverian George.
Roughly one death had occurred once every fifty years for around six centuries.
The bodies had been dried out but they had not decayed any further, locked
as they were within the null-time bubble.
What it signified, he wasn’t yet sure.
The Brazen Head was primarily a coaching inn. Most of its paying guests
had stayed overnight before continuing their journeys. The long tables
in the main room downstairs were full and noisy with people eating breakfast
quickly lest they get left behind. Some of the brazen women were eating,
too. So were their former customers who regarded the arrival of Marie
in her velvet dress with leering glances and frankly disgustingly suggestive
sniggers.
She was about to flee back upstairs away from this melee when a woman
in an apron and mob cap took her by the arm into a quiet alcove by the
kitchen and provided her with a large bowl of something like porridge
but made with boiled wheat rather than oats. There was honey to sweeten
it and it was nourishing enough. She took her time eating it because it
gave her time to think.
The landlady, Mrs Delaney, as she introduced herself, had been thinking,
too.
"A velvet gown but no other clothes to your name," she said.
"All is not as it seems with you, is it?"
Marie wondered how to respond, but Mrs Delaney wasn't done.
"Did you come up to the city hoping to find work? Wearing a dress
your mistress was done with, hoping it would make you look higher placed
than you are?"
Marie still had no words to say, but she thought Mrs Delaney was concocting
a better background story than she could have managed for herself.
“No, that’s not it,” the landlady continued. “White
hands that have never done hard work… never been immersed in lye
soap or chapped to the bone taking down linen that freeze-dried in the
dead of winter. More like you’ve run away from some country manor
– following a man your father disapproved of, I’ll be bound.”
“I… am looking for work,” Marie admitted without giving
away any details to add to either romance.
"Respectable work, that would be?"
'Well, of course." Marie thought of the 'brazen hussies' and certainly
didn't want to be lumped in with them.
"Are you handy with a sewing needle?"
"I... can be."
"Mrs Playfair is housekeeper for the Dean of Christchurch. Heretics
though they are, they're decent people and she was telling me the other
day that she needs a seamstress to help her keep the vestments and what
not in good order. If you tell her I sent you she'll see you right. It’ll
be clean work, and not skivvying. But if she sees you in that fancy velvet
she'll think you're a fallen woman and won't let you over the threshold.
Wait while that lot are off out of here and I've a minute to spare and
I'll find you something clean and decent and more suitable to your station."
"Thank you," Marie said. It was the best she could manage. She
had hardly expected kindness of that sort in this rough, frightening place
where she felt so dangerously out of her depth.
The Doctor stepped into a large room lit, so it seemed, from within the
stone walls themselves. This was very unlikely. He had visited, on more
than one occasion, caves with natural phosphorescence that lit them though
they were thousands of feet deep and had never seen daylight. But this
was not such a place. This was some unnatural thing going on.
In the middle of the room, a figure sat upon an elaborately carved wooden
chair that just fell short of being a throne because it wasn’t QUITE
grand enough. The body was that of a slender man dressed very much in
the fashions of the day that had been shown off at the Handel performance
only a few hours ago.
The head was something entirely different. The Doctor studied it carefully,
keeping a safe distance for the moment. It was made of brass, but it had
a kind of living aspect to it. The eyes in the brass sockets glowed a
deep red-orange and moved as quickly as a nervous man in a crowd. The
nostrils in the over-sized nose flared as if it was scenting something.
The mouth moved with the slow deliberation of a ruminating cow. Around
the wide face was a mass of brass hair that flared like an archaic rendition
of the sun.
It was, The Doctor noted ironically, a Brazen Head. Such things had been
mentioned in Human literature and folklore since there was knowledge enough
to write such things down. They were usually thought to be mechanical
contraptions given ‘life’ by practitioners of magic. Several
accounts of the life of Roger Bacon, the thirteenth century monk, philosopher
and sorcerer tell of his having some such thing under his control.
But this one looked more like it was controlling the man whose body it
was sitting upon. He began to understand the significance of those bodies
in the ante-room. Every so often, it seemed, it chose a ‘victim’
by some power or other and possessed it, draining the body of all vitality
before discarding it like the husk of a fruit that had been squeezed dry.
If his guess of a fifty-year interval was correct the chosen vessel lived
without ordinary sustenance for an unnatural time before he or she was
completely used up – if ‘lived’ was the right word for
it. ‘Existed’ was probably closer to the mark.
“I know you are there, Time Lord!” said the sonorous, metallic
voice that came from a mouth as the brass lips contracted and stretched
to enunciate the words. “Come closer.”
“I think I’ll stay here, if it’s all the same,”
The Doctor casually replied. “Who are you and what are you doing
in this place with technology beyond this time.”
“I am Chermach Molonuhn of the Sabxeuzach,” the voice responded.
The Doctor watched the cheek and jowl movements in fascination. The simulacrum
of life was near perfect. One could almost imagine there was a bone structure
beneath the brass ‘flesh’.
“That’s quite a mouthful. I came across a being once that
called itself the Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe.
It also went by ‘Max’. I could call you Cher. I don’t
think she’ll mind. I can make it up to her next time I see her,
anyway.”
“Your loquaciousness is no more than a façade to disguise
your fear of me and my power,” the creature henceforth known –
to The Doctor, at least – as Cher, growled.
“That would only be the case if I feared you,” The Doctor
answered. “Look at me – do I look scared?”
The eyes swivelled around to the sound of his voice, but The Doctor had
the strongest feeling that they couldn’t actually see. They were,
he thought, weapons, nasty ones at that, but they were blind.
“I know your name, now, but WHAT are you, and why are you here?
And WHY did you summon me? Did YOU steal my TARDIS?”
“Your time machine….”
Cher gave a rasping sound that was possibly meant to be a laugh but came
out more like a throaty cough – if it HAD a throat, that is. The
glow from the walls intensified in the farthest corner, illuminating an
enclave just big enough for the familiar blue police box to sit. The Doctor
disguised his relief with some more of the ‘loquaciousness’
that irritated Cher so much.
“Impressive, that. The only other beings I’ve known who can
move the TARDIS by remote telekinesis are the Sisterhood of Karn, and
they’re quite close genetically to Time Lords. I suppose you must
have detected the artron emissions given off during materialisation. That
puts you into a certain bracket of telepathic beings, but don’t
get too superior about it. That bracket includes a species of blind sea
slug from the Andromeda sector that homes in on the artron energy, mistaking
it for their favourite flavour of kelp. Landing in the Andromedan seas
can be really annoying.”
Marie found that the mention of Mrs Delaney opened doors in the presbytery
of Christchurch Cathedral, which, ironically, had a corner on Fishamble
Street where she had started out last night. Mrs Playfair, the housekeeper
for the Dean and other clergymen who resided there thought her counterpart
at the Brazen Head an honest woman for all that she was a Papist and immediately
accepted her recommendation for seamstress. Marie found herself employed,
with room and board and one afternoon off a week as well as Sunday. Within
ten minutes she was sitting in a light and airy room with thread, needles
and thimble and a basket of vestments as well as stockings, shirts and
shifts that needed attention. She sat by the window overlooking the cathedral
garden and set to work. She was still a little concerned about The Doctor.
How long would it take him to make good his promise? Would she be reclaimed
today, tomorrow, next week?
If it did take some time, at least she had a safe place to be, where nobody
would try to get into her room to rifle through her few possessions, where
she would be fed and had clean work – not skivvying, and certainly
not the occupation of ‘fallen women’ to do while she waited.
It was hard work. After an hour her neck and back ached from the work.
For encouragement in her tasks she found herself being read to for long
periods of time by assorted curates. They all took her to be a ‘papist’
and regarded her as a case for conversion. In the course of the morning
she heard a number of long-winded tracts from men such as William Moreton,
the predecessor to the current dean, and on one occasion, from the famous
Jonathon Swift, who currently held the Deanship of St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, the ‘second’ Cathedral of Protestant Dublin. She
resisted the urge to praise his more popular works like Gulliver’s
Travels, and certainly not to mention having seen more than one film of
the story.
Still, if being subjected to a little proselytising was the worst she
might suffer, she wasn’t doing so bad, all considered. The Doctor
had thought there was something far more dangerous going on when he left
her at the Brazen Head. When the morning’s labours came to an end
and she was sent to the servant’s dining room, she offered up a
Papist prayer for his safety along with the Protestant ‘grace’
before their meal.
Brazen Heads in mythology were famed for their ability to speak. The
Doctor was famed in certain circles for the same, but in his case the
remarkable thing wasn't that he COULD speak but rather that very few beings
in the universe could STOP him speaking. The being presently being addressed
as Cher had endured thirty-five minutes of The Doctor not only talking
but moving around the room, forcing the eyes, sighted or otherwise, to
swivel around to follow him. Finally, the patience of the Brazen Head
snapped and the eyes fired a beam that left two scorch marks on the wall
a few inches from where The Doctor was standing.
"Enough!" It pronounced. "I want only I've thing from you,
Time Lord."
"And that would be?" The Doctor asked guilelessly - or at least
with the innocent tone of being without guile.
"You and your machine."
"That's two things."
"I have been a prisoner here for a thousand Sabxeuzach eons ... Six
centuries by the solar orbits of this cursed planet. You will take me
away from here. You will return me to my home world where I will exact
my revenge on those who betrayed me."
"You know, I just KNEW that was going to be your plan," The
Doctor said nonchalantly. "As soon as I saw you I thought 'Here's
somebody who needs to return to his home world to exact revenge.' Well,
hard cheese, Sonny. The TARDIS isn't a taxi."
"You will do this or die," Cher demanded.
"Well, obviously that's not true," The Doctor responded. "You
can't kill me or you won't escape. You need a TARDIS pilot."
"I will kill innocents in the city above us."
"Oh, I am sure you can do that," The Doctor conceded. "I've
seen the bodies out there. You can kill anyone, just like that. But let
me tell you... if one more human is hurt thanks to your machinations,
I will destroy you utterly. You think you are immortal. You think you
are powerful. Can you keep talking in the heart of a volcano or the fiery
surface of a newly forming planet? Or perhaps if I dropped you off on
the permanent night side of a frozen outer planet… you might struggle
to keep your miraculously elastic properties when you're stuck in a glacier."
"You cannot!" Cher cried out in unrighteous indignation. “Six
centuries I have been trapped here. I must be free. You WILL free me."
"No, I won't," The Doctor insisted. "Not even if you had
said 'please' - which you haven't done."
Marie's first day as a seamstress was followed by a second, a third,
a week, two weeks. She stopped counting the days and after a month, stopped
waiting for The Doctor to turn up. She never quite stopped believing he
would, but she stopped EXPECTING him to come.
She had more clothes, now. Mrs Playfair had directed her to a cloth market
on her day off and she had bought serviceable dress lengths that she made
up in the evening after her work was over. On Sunday afternoons after
service in the Cathedral she got used to walking in company with one or
other or the young curates whose expectations ran to a 'living' as vicar
of a country church with a quiet, respectable wife. Marie fitted the purpose
in their eyes. They seemed to have forgotten that she was a papist in
their enthusiasm.
Marie kept them at bay with polite acceptance of their solicitations that
stopped short of actual betrothal.
The Doctor WOULD be back... some day.
He had promised.
Cher was angry. The Doctor's persistent refusal to assist in its escape
from Earth was extremely aggravating, as was his constant movement back
and forwards and around the room. He was not permitted to approach the
TARDIS, of course, or the door to the ante room full of discarded bodies.
Any time he came close to either of those possible means of escape the
eyes fired a few inches to his right or left. Even so, he managed to keep
Cher constantly swivelling around to follow him.
"I won't help you," The Doctor insisted. "I won't unleash
you upon the unfortunate world that spawned you. But nor will I let you
harm one more human being. If it means I have to share your prison for
a millennium to stop you taking more victims to drain, then so be it.
I AM a Time Lord and I can be patient."
That was a lie. He was the most impatient man in Creation. It was his
chief fault. Besides, he couldn't live indefinitely without food, drink
and, though less often than humans, the use of a lavatory. He couldn't
keep up the game of brinkmanship anywhere near as long as the centuries
old mechanical life form could.
The threat disturbed Cher, though, and he only had to play it out for
a little while longer to spring the trap.
It all hung on the fact that Cher couldn't see him, only follow his voice,
and the fact that The Doctor had learnt to 'throw' his voice long ago.
And the fact that those little windows in the top panels of the TARDIS
exterior were something stronger than ordinary glass.
The Doctor stood several feet from his beloved police box but the final
straw that drove Cher into a murderous rage despite the futility of killing
his ‘taxi driver’ sounded as if it came from there. The eyes
blazed and death beamed from them, hitting two of those little windows
and bouncing back. Intense heat engulfed the Chermach Molonuhn of the
Sabxeuzach. It screamed just once as its mouth was seared wide open. The
human body being drained of its life force crumbled to merciful dust as
the head glowed white hot and fell to the floor with a metallic clang,
the enraged expression fixed for eternity.
As soon as it was 'dead' in every possible sense of the word, the null
time bubble collapsed. Time swept through the passages like a scouring
wind, breaking up the rest of the mummified bodies and rendering them
to dust that not even the most dedicated forensic anthropologist would
recognise as formerly human. As time caught up and then swept onwards,
all trace of the horror was obliterated apart from the grotesque mask
that would eventually be classified as a medieval oddity and put at the
back of an exhibition of bronze work in the Dublin Castle Museum.
The Doctor braced himself against the sudden passage of time the way a
lighthouse braces itself against a winter storm. When it was over he looked
at the same old walls now illuminated by subtle up lighting that attempted
to preserve the historical atmosphere.
As he calculated in his head how many centuries he had been swept by the
temporal implosion he heard voices nearby. One, louder than the others
and with the unmistakeable tone of a tour guide, was explaining how the
medieval undercroft of Dublin Castle had only been discovered in the late
nineteen-eighties when foundations were being dug for an extension to
the Civil Service offices. Now it formed an exciting extension to the
tour of the eighteenth and nineteenth century Castle complex.
His TARDIS was gone, but The Doctor wasn't worried. Since the Court of
Elizabeth Tudor, there had been a standing order in any part of the British
Empire that, should a blue box be found without its owner, it should be
looked after until he came to claim it - sometimes after paying hefty
fines and making sincere apologies. He had no doubt that the Irish Free
State Government when they took back this corner of the Empire for themselves
continued the tradition. He just had to find out where to pay the fine
and where to get enough Euros.
Then he could keep his promise to Marie.
It was mid-afternoon on a Wednesday when Marie was told that a gentleman
wished to see her. She was surprised. It was not one of her free afternoons
as even the most persistent of the young curates knew. What sort of gentleman
would be asking for her during her hours of work and how was it that she
was given leave to put down her needlework and attend such a caller?
She was NOT expecting The Doctor. For a moment as she stepped into the
quiet hallway of the presbytery she was startled by his presence. He was
dressed in the clothes of a respectable mid-eighteenth century gentleman,
right down to the silk knee stockings on surprisingly well turned legs.
He smiled and bowed to her as she approached.
“I came as soon as I could,” he said in apologetic tones.
I had some trouble with null-time-bubbles and being imploded into the
twenty-first century. Getting the TARDIS back was a bit of bother, too.
Nobody could remember which extension of the National Museum had it in
their archives. I eventually located it in Howth, at an expedition of
Post and Telecommunications equipment from the industrial revolution to
present day – the present day of 2017, that is – not THIS
present day, of course.”
Marie said nothing. Her expression said it all.
“I know I might be out by a week or so,” he admitted. “I
went to the Brazen Head to find you. A woman called Mrs Delaney had to
be actually hypnotised before she would tell me where you were, and one
called Mrs Playfair RESISTED hypnotic suggestion for twenty minutes before
I finally got it from her that you were the seamstress."
"I have been for the past six months," she finally replied,
measuring the note of censure in her voice carefully. "Did you notice
it was spring when we went to the Messiah. Its October, now. I watched
the blossom on that apple tree out there in the cathedral garden bloom
and then fall away. I watched the apples growing. I picked the apples
with help from a young curate called George Joyce. The apple pies have
been eaten. George has asked me to marry him, TWICE."
The Doctor was concerned.
"You haven't accepted him, have you?"
"No, but I was running out of reasons to say no."
"So you're ready to come with me?"
"Not just like that. I need to tell Mrs Playfair something - you're
my uncle come to make me heiress to your clock-making business in Waterford
or something. Some good reason to leave a secure position in a respectable
household. And I will have to leave George a note to say I really CAN'T
marry him. I might send that velvet dress and the rest of the gold coins
to Mrs Delaney. She's the one who set me up here, away from the brazen
hussies at the Brazen Head. She deserves a reward for her kindness."
"Speaking of Brazen Heads... wait till I tell you about the one I
tangled with."
"You can tell me about it over coffee and sandwiches at O’Brien’s
in The Square," she replied. "In MY time, of course. Coffee
is considered too strong for respectable women in this time and the sandwich
hasn't been invented, yet."
"You’re only twenty years short. The Earl of Sandwich got peckish
in the middle of a Card game in 1762. The prototype wasn’t brilliant,
actually. They cut the bread too thick and it needed a bit of mustard.
I told him...."
Marie stopped his anecdote with a thoroughly withering look.
"Just... go and sit down in the Dean’s drawing room quietly
while I get sorted." She sighed as she remembered something. "There's
a gentleman called Swift in there, already. He's a friend of Reverend
Cobbe’s. Under no circumstances are you to launch into any long
winded critiques of his published works."
The Doctor grinned widely.
"That's all right. Johnny Swift and I go back years. Take all the
time you need letting George down gently. We'll be just fine."
Marie groaned aloud at the insanity of it all and went to put away her
thimbles.